Appointment , 5 July 2024 As the leader of the majority party in the House of Commons, Starmer was appointed prime minister,
First Lord of the Treasury and
Minister for the Civil Service by
King Charles III on 5 July 2024, becoming the first Labour prime minister since Gordon Brown in 2010 and the first one to win a general election since
Tony Blair in
2005. He also became the first prime minister to enter office with a knighthood since
Alec Douglas-Home. Starmer and his wife, Victoria, were driven from
Buckingham Palace to
Downing Street. Starmer stopped the car on the way back from the palace to go on a walkabout in Downing Street to meet cheering crowds. In his first speech as prime minister, Starmer paid tribute to his predecessor, Rishi Sunak, saying "his achievement as the first British Asian prime minister of our country should not be underestimated by anyone" and he also recognised "the dedication and hard work he brought to his leadership", but added that the people of the UK had voted for change: Other world leaders, including
Joe Biden and
Justin Trudeau, as well as Blair and Brown, congratulated Starmer upon his appointment as prime minister. One of his first acts was to declare the
Rwanda asylum plan "dead": the Home Secretary,
Yvette Cooper, would establish a
Border Security Command to tackle
smuggling gangs which facilitate
illegal migrant crossings over the English Channel. Starmer went on a tour of the
four nations of the UK, meeting with leaders including
John Swinney,
Michelle O'Neill, and
Vaughan Gething. He also met the twelve
regional mayors and announced the establishment of the
Council of the Nations and Regions. On 24 July 2024 he attended his first
Prime Minister's Questions in the Commons.
Cabinet on 6 July 2024 Starmer set about appointing a new
Cabinet, which first met on 6 July, and he completed his ministerial appointments on 7 July. Among Starmer's ministerial appointments were the scientist
Patrick Vallance as
Minister of State for Science, the rehabilitation campaigner
James Timpson as
Minister of State for Prisons, Parole and Probation, and the international law expert
Richard Hermer as
Attorney General for England and Wales, who were created life peers to sit in the
House of Lords. The new government also contains a few ministers from the
New Labour Blair/Brown governments, including
Hilary Benn, Yvette Cooper, David Lammy, and Ed Miliband in Cabinet, and
Jacqui Smith and
Douglas Alexander as junior ministers. cabinet in October 2025 In September 2025, Starmer's deputy
Angela Rayner resigned over a
tax scandal in what was described as a major blow to Starmer's leadership. Following Rayner's resignation, Starmer conducted the
first major reshuffle of his premiership.
Peter Mandelson In December 2024, Starmer appointed
Peter Mandelson to serve as
British ambassador to the United States. Starmer dismissed Mandelson in September 2025 over his association with
Jeffrey Epstein. In February 2026, during Prime Minister's Questions, Starmer said that Mandelson had "lied repeatedly" during vetting about
his long-term relationship with Epstein. Starmer said he regretted the appointment and announced that, with the King's agreement, Mandelson had been removed from the
Privy Council for bringing it into disrepute. The Mandelson scandal has been significant for his premiership, and led to the resignation of Starmer's
Chief of Staff Morgan McSweeney on 8 February as well as his
Director of Communications Tim Allan on 9 February 2026. Hours after Allan announced his resignation,
Scottish Labour leader
Anas Sarwar called on Starmer to quit as Prime Minister, but cabinet ministers responded by voicing their support for Starmer. In April 2026, it was reported that Mandelson had failed security vetting for the role of ambassador. The Foreign Office, which Starmer accused of deliberately withholding information from him, overruled the recommendation of the vetting agency and allowed Mandelson to take up the post. Starmer faced calls to resign over allegations he misled Parliament when he said "full due process" was followed during the appointment.
Public opinion Starmer has been viewed unfavourably by the British public during his tenure as prime minister. Starmer's average approval rating fell from 5% after the election to −30% by January 2025 before levelling off until April 2025 when it began to decline further, by November that year. A poll by
Ipsos indicates that Starmer is the most unpopular prime minister since Ipsos's records began in 1977. It found 13% of the public were satisfied with Starmer's job performance, 79% dissatisfied, giving a net approval rating of minus 66. Starmer's average net approval remained higher than Boris Johnson's during the
Partygate scandal, Jeremy Corbyn's when he resigned as Labour leader and when Liz Truss resigned as prime minister. Starmer's unpopularity has been tied to poor results for Labour in the
2025 United Kingdom local elections. Likewise, the party has garnered poor polling numbers ahead of the
2026 United Kingdom local elections and
2026 Senedd election. An opinion-piece in
Politico viewed this as a likely catalyst for a leadership challenge. In September 2025,
The Guardian reported that plans to replace Starmer had begun among groups of MPs. The reports were instigated by briefings to the media from Starmer's allies, which stated that he would resist any attempted challenge to his leadership. By November, further reports emerged that plans to replace Starmer with
Wes Streeting could be enacted after the
November 2025 United Kingdom budget. Shortly thereafter,
Clive Lewis became the first Labour MP to publicly call for Starmer's resignation. and Keir Starmer in February 2025 A
YouGov poll for
The Times in February 2026 indicates that 51% of respondents thought Starmer was either more sleazy or as sleazy as
Boris Johnson. The poll found that 43% of participants did not think Starmer had handled the
Peter Mandelson scandal well; 23% thought that he had; 14% thought Starmer had shown good judgment in his handling of the affair.
Domestic policy Domestically, Starmer said that his primary concerns would be economic growth, reforming the planning system, infrastructure, energy, healthcare, education, childcare, and strengthening workers' rights, as set out in Labour's 2024 election manifesto. The
2024 State Opening of Parliament outlined 39 bills that Labour proposed to introduce in the months ahead, including ones to
renationalise the railways, to bring local bus services under local public control, to strengthen the rights of workers, to tackle
illegal immigration, to reform the
House of Lords, and to undertake a programme to speed up the delivery of "high quality infrastructure" and housing. In addition, a number of bills proposed by the previous Conservative government were also included, notably the
Tobacco and Vapes Bill, which featured in the 2023 King's Speech, but had been
abandoned when the election was called.
Skills England, a body whose objective will be to reduce the need for overseas employees by improving skills training for people in England, was launched on 22 July.
Economy The new
chancellor of the exchequer,
Rachel Reeves, accused the previous government of leaving a £21.9 billion "black hole", and announced on 29 July that certain
winter fuel payments would be scrapped for around 10 million pensioners. Following
criticism of the plan, Starmer has defended the scrapping of these winter fuel payments, arguing that he had to make "tough decisions to stabilise the economy". On 10 September the government benches defeated a Conservative Party motion in Parliament by a majority of 120 to block the measure. Starmer's Labour Government inherited a number of
ongoing industrial disputes from the preceding
Conservative Government and agreed pay deals with
trade unions representing NHS and railway workers, ending strikes in the first few months of taking office. In August 2024, Starmer's government agreed to increase public-sector worker pay by 5 to 7 per cent. On 10 October 2024, the Government introduced the
Employment Rights Bill, which became an Act of Parliament in December 2025. This includes an increase in minimum wages and a number of rights, such as immediate protection against unfair dismissal and the entitlement for employees to request flexible working arrangements unless the employer can demonstrate that such arrangements are impractical. The government's inaugural International Investment Summit was held on 14 October 2024 at the
Guildhall in London. The
October 2024 budget was presented to the
House of Commons by
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves on 30 October 2024. It covered Labour's fiscal plans, with a focus on investment, healthcare, education, childcare,
sustainable energy, transport, and worker's rights enrichment. The
National Minimum Wage is set to increase by 6.7 per cent (reaching £12.21 per hour) and a £22.6 billion increase in the day-to-day health budget was announced, with a £3.1 billion increase in the capital budget. That includes £1 billion for hospital repairs and rebuilding projects. The government plans to allocate £5 billion for housing investment in the fiscal year 2025–26, with a focus on enhancing the availability of affordable housing. Education will receive £6.7 billion of capital investment, a 19 per cent real-terms increase. This includes £1.4 billion to rebuild more than 500 schools. The June 2025
Spending Review was presented to the House of Commons by the Chancellor, allocating day-to-day budgets for the years between 2025/26 and 2028/29 and capital budgets for the years between 2025/26 and 2029/30. It included £14.2 billion for a new nuclear power station at
Sizewell C, £15 billion for transport projects outside London, and £39 billion over a decade for social and affordable housing.
Immigration One of Starmer's first acts was the cancellation of the controversial
Rwanda asylum plan, describing it as "dead and buried". Cooper established the
Border Security Command to tackle
smuggling gangs which facilitate
illegal migrant crossings over the English Channel. In a May 2025 speech and associated
white paper on the topic of immigration, Starmer said that the UK risked becoming an "island of strangers", and that high immigration had done "incalculable damage" to society. The white paper outlined changes aimed at reducing immigration, including training for people in the UK. His language was criticised by the left for its perceived echoes of
Enoch Powell's
Rivers of Blood speech. In June, Starmer apologised for his "island of strangers" comment, saying that the phrase "wasn't right" and "I deeply regret using it". He said that he and his speechwriters had been unaware of the similarity with Powell's words. In early September 2025, it was reported that 3,567 people had arrived on the UK's shores since the deal with France was ratified in August, however returns had not yet commenced. On 15 September 2025, the first "one in, one out" migrant flight, which was due to fly one migrant from London to Paris on an
Air France flight, was cancelled due to protests from charities and threats of legal action. On 16 September 2025, deportation flights were cancelled again due to legal challenges and protests. Further that day it was reported that a 25-year-old
Eritrean asylum seeker who had arrived on a small boat on 12 August 2025, would not be deported as planned on 17 September, after he won his High Court bid to have the removal temporarily blocked. As part of his immigration reform, on 18 November 2025, the
2025 UK refugee plan was presented to Parliament by
Shabana Mahmood. In November 2025, Starmer described the decrease in net migration to 204,000 as a "step in the right direction". Entries for the year ending June 2025 were 898,000, departures were 693,000.
Healthcare On 11 September 2024 Starmer pledged that there would be no more money for the NHS without reform. In response to the report from a nine-week review conducted by the peer and NHS surgeon
Lord Darzi, which said that the NHS in England was in a critical condition, Starmer said the solution was reform, not money, and that there will be no more money without reform. In Government, Starmer reaffirmed the outgoing Conservative government's commitment of no new
HIV cases in the United Kingdom by 2030. On 10 February 2025 Starmer, alongside the singer and HIV activist
Beverley Knight and the
Terrence Higgins Trust chief executive Richard Angell, recorded himself taking a
rapid HIV home test. This made Starmer the first serving British prime minister and serving
G7 leader to take a test on camera. In March 2025 Starmer, along with
Health Secretary Wes Streeting announced a two-year plan to abolish
NHS England, saying it would to reduce bureaucracy and increase funding available for more effective purposes within the service.
Welfare and pensions Starmer initially declined to abolish the
two-child benefit cap introduced by the
Cameron–Clegg coalition government in 2013, citing financial reasons. On 23 July 2024 Labour
withdrew the whip from seven of its MPs who had supported an amendment tabled by the
Scottish National Party's Westminster parliamentary leader
Stephen Flynn to scrap it, with Flynn saying that scrapping the cap would immediately raise 300,000 children out of poverty. MPs rejected the SNP amendment by 363 votes to 103. The seven Labour MPs
suspended for six months were
John McDonnell,
Richard Burgon,
Ian Byrne,
Apsana Begum,
Imran Hussain,
Zarah Sultana, and
Rebecca Long-Bailey, all of whom sat as
independents; all MPs, (with the exception of Sultana, who resigned from the party in July 2025 to co-found
Your Party with former Labour Leader
Jeremy Corbyn), were later readmitted to the Parliamentary Labour Party. A Child Poverty Taskforce was launched by Starmer, in which expert officials from across government would work together on how best to support more than four million children living in poverty. Starmer eventually u-turned in November 2025, abolishing the two-child benefit cap in
that month's fiscal budget. In July 2025 the government's Universal Credit Bill passed the House of Commons. It will increase the standard rate of
Universal Credit. The measures reduce the health-related aspect of universal credit for certain claimants, but they make sure that other parts of the benefit increase beyond inflation.
Education Starmer's government has imposed VAT on private school fees, expanded free school meals to 500,000 more children, and opened 750 free breakfast clubs in primary schools. It also presided over an increase in tuition fees for higher education in England along with an increase in
maintenance loans.
Criminal justice Shortly after taking office, Starmer said that there were "too many prisoners", and described the previous government as having acted "almost beyond recklessness". Saying it would help manage prison overcrowding, the newly appointed
Justice Secretary,
Shabana Mahmood, announced the implementation of an early release scheme which allowed for prisoners in England and Wales to be released after serving 40 per cent of their sentences rather than the 50 per cent previously introduced under the last government. Over 1,700 prisoners were released in September, with further releases expected in the following year. It then emerged that one prisoner released early under the scheme was charged with sexual assault relating to an alleged offence against a woman on the same day he was freed. Starmer has defended the releasing of prisoners, and accused the previous government of having "broke[n] the prison system", with plans to build new prisons. Critics have accused Starmer's government of
two-tier policing, which has led to these critics labelling him with the moniker "Two-Tier Keir". Allegations of two-tier policing were prevalent during the
Southport riots in August 2024 and the subsequent arrest of rioters and some of their supporters, such as
Lucy Connolly, along with the Epping protests in July 2025. Conversely, critics such as
Jamie Driscoll believe that the police are more favourable to right-wing protests and more heavy-handed against left-wing protests and groups such as
Palestine Action, which was proscribed by Starmer's government in 2025.
2024 England and Northern Ireland riots at 10 Downing Street, 1 August 2024. Following the
2024 Southport stabbing, in which three young girls were killed, Starmer described the incident as horrendous and shocking and thanked
emergency services for their swift response. He visited Southport and laid flowers at the scene, where he was heckled by some members of the public. Starmer later wrote amidst
the riots across England and Northern Ireland following the stabbing that those who had "hijacked the vigil for the victims" had "insulted the community as it grieves" and that rioters would feel the full force of the law. On 1 August, and following a meeting with senior police officers, Starmer announced the establishment of a National Violent Disorder Programme to facilitate greater cooperation between police forces when dealing with
violent disorder. On 4 August Starmer stated that rioters "will feel the full force of the law" and that "You will regret taking part in this, whether directly or those whipping up this action online and then running away themselves". He added "I won't shy away from calling it what it is – far-right thuggery". Starmer later called an emergency response meeting of
COBRA. After the COBRA meeting, Starmer ordered a "standing army" to be set up to tackle the ongoing "far-right" riots. This was possible under the special emergency powers which were first used 40 years ago under the
Ridley Plan, to tackle striking miners in 1984 and 1985. Following the 2024 UK riots, the Starmer government announced that it is reviewing the
Online Safety Act 2023 with the possibility of strengthening its provisions. Starmer rejected calls from some MPs – including the Labour MP
Diane Abbott, the
Reform UK leader
Nigel Farage and the Conservative MP
Dame Priti Patel – to
recall Parliament to
Westminster. After he said "large social media companies and those who run them" were contributing to the disorder,
Elon Musk, the owner of the social media website
X, criticised Starmer for not condemning all participants and only blaming the
far-right. Musk further said Starmer was not protecting all communities in the United Kingdom, which he said had a "two-tier" policing system.
Acceptance of gifts In September 2024, Starmer and fellow
senior government ministers faced criticism for accepting gifts from
Labour donors. Starmer also faced
accusations of breaking parliamentary rules by not declaring £5,000 worth of clothes bought for
his wife by the Labour donor
Lord Alli. That same month,
Sky News reported that Starmer had received £107,145 in gifts, benefits, and hospitality since December 2019, which was two-and-a-half times more than any other MP.
Foreign policy Politico reported that Starmer divided his time half and half between foreign and domestic matters, and in his first 17 months as prime minister visited 44 countries on 37 trips from the UK.
United States , 10 July 2024 , 27 February 2025 In July 2024, following the 2024 general election, US president
Joe Biden congratulated Starmer on "a hell of a victory". Starmer and Biden discussed their shared commitment to the
Special Relationship between the US and the UK, as well as their mutual support of Ukraine. Following the
attempted assassination of
Donald Trump in July 2024, the former
president of the United States at the time, Starmer posted on Twitter saying "Political violence in any form has no place in our societies" and extended his best wishes to Trump and
his family. In September 2024, during a visit to
New York City to address the
UN General Assembly, Starmer met the American
Republican Party presidential candidate, Trump, at
Trump Tower. Following the meeting, Starmer said it was "good" to have met with Trump and that the meeting was an opportunity for both Trump and Starmer to establish a working relationship. Following Trump's election victory in the
2024 United States presidential election, Starmer called Trump to formally congratulate him on 6 November and was assured that the "special relationship" between the United Kingdom and United States "would continue to thrive". In February 2025 Starmer met with President Trump at the
White House to discuss continued support to Ukraine and a potential peace deal. They additionally discussed a potential trade deal. He also presented a handwritten letter from
King Charles III inviting the President to a historic second state visit to the UK. In June 2025 Starmer supported Israel's right to self-defence in the
Twelve-Day War and
United States strikes on Iranian nuclear sites, stating that "Iran can never be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon and the US has taken action to alleviate that threat".
NATO at the NATO summit in 2024 The first overseas meeting Starmer attended as prime minister was the
2024 NATO summit held in
Washington from 9 to 11 July 2024. On the flight to the summit, Starmer laid out a "cast iron" commitment to increase
defence spending to the NATO target of 2.5 per cent of
GDP in line with the NATO target, following a "root and branch" review of
British armed forces.
Europe Since he became prime minister Starmer has sought to "reset"
UK relations with the
European Union following
Brexit, which he opposed. He met with a number of European leaders during his first few months in office. On 27 August 2024 Starmer and German chancellor
Olaf Scholz announced talks towards revising a
Germany-
UK co-operation agreement covering areas including defence, energy security, science and technology.
Russo-Ukrainian war , 10 July 2024 At the 2024 NATO summit, Starmer signalled that
Ukraine could use British
Storm Shadow missiles,
sent by HMG by way of military aid, to strike military targets inside
Russia, during the
Russian invasion of Ukraine. In a meeting with Ukrainian president
Volodymyr Zelenskyy Starmer called for an "irreversible"
membership strategy for
Ukraine to
join NATO. Following a
heated meeting between US president Trump and President Zelenskyy at the White House, Starmer organised a
summit of European leaders in London. Among the things discussed at the summit were continued support for Ukraine, security guarantees for the country and peace efforts.
China , 30 January 2026 In November 2024, Starmer met Chinese president
Xi Jinping at the
G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro and told him he wanted to build a 'consistent, durable, respectful' relationship with China. In January 2026, Starmer approved Chinese government plans for a new embassy in London. In the same month, he
visited China, becoming the first British prime minister to visit China since 2018. Starmer's trip primarily focused on broadening trade ties, bringing a delegation heavy on
British banking executives, including
HSBC,
Barclays, and
Standard Chartered, and cultural emissaries representing the arts and sports, as well as manufacturers, including
Airbus,
AstraZeneca,
Brompton Bikes,
Jaguar Land Rover, and
McLaren Automotive. A "China spy case" that came to light in 2024 involving Christopher Cash, a former parliamentary researcher, and Christopher Berry collapsed in September 2025 after the
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) dropped charges under the
Official Secrets Act. The two were accused of passing information harmful to UK interests between December 2021 and February 2023. Director of Public Prosecutions
Stephen Parkinson said the case fell apart because the government failed to provide evidence that China was officially considered a national security threat at the time, as required under a 2025 legal precedent. Conservative leader
Kemi Badenoch accused Starmer's government of withholding key evidence to appease China, while the government denied interference and blamed outdated laws and the previous administration's stance on China.
Gaza war On the
Gaza war, Starmer has supported Israel's right to self-defence and has not blocked all arms sales to Israel. He has also condemned some of Israel's actions, called for a ceasefire, committed humanitarian aid to Gaza, and supported a
two-state solution. In October 2023, shortly after the
Hamas attack on Israel, when asked what a proportionate response by Israel would be, Starmer stated that Israel had the "right to defend herself" and "Israel has the right to do everything it can" to return the hostages. When subsequently asked whether a siege involving the cutting off of food and water was appropriate, he responded, "I think Israel does have that right" adding that "everything should be done within international law but I don't want to step away from the sort of core principles that Israel has a right to defend herself and Hamas bears responsibility for these terrorist acts". Under Starmer's premiership, the licences of some
British arms sales to Israel were suspended in September 2024 because of a "clear risk" that the weapons could be used to violate international law.
Foreign Secretary David Lammy announced the UK Government's suspension of 30 of 350 arms export licences to Israel, affecting equipment such as parts for fighter jets, helicopters and drones. However, in the last three months of 2024, UK arms licenses to Israel totalled £127.6 million, exceeding the £115 million worth of military equipment sent to Israel in the prior four years, 2020 to 2023. at 10 Downing Street, 10 September 2025 In November 2024 Starmer's government stated that Netanyahu would be arrested if he travels to the UK, after the
International Criminal Court issued
an international arrest warrant for him for alleged war crimes. In May 2025 Starmer issued a joint statement with
Emmanuel Macron and
Mark Carney condemning Israel's
renewed offensive against Gaza. He called for Israel to immediately stop its military operations and to immediately allow humanitarian aid into Gaza. The statement condemned remarks by members of the Israeli government suggesting the destruction in Gaza would lead to relocation of its population as "abhorrent" and against international law. He said his government would take "concrete actions" if Israel continued its "egregious actions". Netanyahu accused Starmer of siding with Hamas, saying "you're on the wrong side of justice, you're on the wrong side of humanity and you're on the wrong side of history". On 5 July, the government made the protest group
Palestine Action a "
proscribed organisation" under the
Terrorism Act 2000, following its vandalism of military aircraft at
RAF Brize Norton alleged to support the Israeli military. On 6 August, at a Labour
National Executive Committee meeting, Starmer said the group had targeted Jewish-owned businesses, and that the ban was not meant "to stifle debate on Palestine". On 9 August, the
Metropolitan Police made 532 arrests, its most in at least a decade, at a protest in
Parliament Square. Of these 522 were for "displaying an item in support of a proscribed organisation", as most protestors carried placards reading "I oppose genocide. I support Palestine Action."
Amnesty International and
Liberty condemned the proscription as infringing on
freedom of speech. Protests against the banning of Palestine Action continued into September 2025, with 890 arrests in one weekend. in Egypt, 13 October 2025 On 29 July 2025, Starmer announced that the United Kingdom would conditionally
recognise the
State of Palestine at the September opening of the
United Nations General Assembly, contingent on Israel's noncompliance with a ceasefire, the facilitation of humanitarian aid, and a commitment to a two-state solution. The announcement followed a letter signed by 225 MPs, including over half of Labour, calling for immediate recognition. One of its coordinators,
Sarah Champion, criticised the conditionality, while Netanyahu and Conservative politicians condemned the move as rewarding Hamas. On 21 September, Starmer announced that the United Kingdom formally recognised Palestine as an independent state.
Sudan In late 2025, Starmer's government faced mounting pressure to suspend
arms sales to the
United Arab Emirates following reports that British-made military equipment was being diverted to the
Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in
Sudan, which had been accused of committing
war crimes and
genocide during the ongoing
Sudanese civil war. == Political positions ==